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(10/12/17 1:49pm)
Researchers at the Clinical Epidemiology Center of St. Louis, Missouri recently discovered that air pollution increases the risk for chronic kidney disease (CKD), which can ultimately develop into end stage renal disease (ESRD).
(10/12/17 1:48pm)
There are few unwanted houseguests worse than the bedbug (Cimex lectularius).
(10/12/17 1:47pm)
In 2004, Hungarian psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi gave a TED talk that introduced the world to “the secret of happiness,” which garnered over 4 million views.
(10/12/17 1:46pm)
Elon Musk has dreamed of sending humans to Mars for years, yet travel to the red planet has always been hampered with a litany of obstacles.
(10/12/17 1:45pm)
To those who suffer from allergies, EpiPens, or epinephrine injections, are the difference between life and death. Yet many families without health insurance have to take the risk, because they cannot afford EpiPens, which can set a family back anywhere from $300 to $630 just for a pack of two.
(10/12/17 1:44pm)
Where there’s a will, there’s a way. For extremophiles, those words aren’t just a mantra but a way of life. Thriving in environments from volcanoes to the frozen Arctic, extremophiles have found a way to adapt to the harshest environments on Earth. Research professor Jocelyne DiRuggiero and her team at Hopkins are studying these extremophiles to learn how they have come to be so versatile.
(10/05/17 4:58pm)
For most college students, sleep deprivation is a frustratingly familiar enemy. Medical professionals recommend seven to nine hours of sleep per night; however, on average, one in three adults fails to meet these standards.
(10/05/17 4:56pm)
Science and technology have never been a more prominent facet of government than they are now, and yet scientists have never been more disregarded. Scientific fact is not immune to the distortion of reality popularized by a Trump campaign and administration that would rather fund a border wall destined for failure than invest in renewable energy.
(10/05/17 4:54pm)
Microsoft Excel gets an update
(10/05/17 4:50pm)
According to the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a major contributor to disabilities and deaths in the U.S. Statistics indicate that 153 people die every day from injuries involving TBI.
(10/05/17 4:49pm)
When we think about the beginnings of humanity, we often imagine a caveman with a club running in circles looking for food. We are taught that humanity slowly evolved in northeastern Africa, that homo sapiens slowly spread through the continent and then out of Africa to Europe, Asia and the Americas.
(10/05/17 4:48pm)
Electronic cigarettes, or e-cigarettes, are thought to be a healthier alternative to the traditional tobacco cigarettes, but recent evidence shows otherwise.
(10/05/17 4:48pm)
A pair of studies from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto, along with researchers in China and the U.S. have found that children who are told that they are smart or that they are high-achieving academic students are more likely to cheat.
(10/05/17 4:47pm)
There’s a vaccine that could eradicate cervical cancer, but it’s heavily underused in the U.S. Thankfully new numbers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that a rising number of U.S. teenagers are receiving one or more shots of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, totaling up to 60 percent in 2016. Experts say the target rate is 80 percent.
(09/28/17 1:43pm)
While many may classify occasional binge drinking as a fun and harmless practice, researchers have beginning to discover otherwise. Recent studies of young college binge drinkers have shown that excessive drinking can have serious and permanent effects on the brain development and brain activity of young adults.
(09/28/17 1:42pm)
The Hudson Lab at UCLA has successfully used physics to tame elements of chemistry. The UCLA research team, led by Eric Hudson, was able to create a new molecule called barium-oxygen-calcium (BaOCa+).
(09/28/17 1:41pm)
Engineers at the University of Houston have recently developed a new way to produce electronic artificial skin that allows a robot to sense differences between hot and cold.
(09/28/17 1:40pm)
Yawning is an everyday phenomenon perceived as a sign of drowsiness and boredom. Some people even see it as a sign of disrespect.
(09/28/17 1:39pm)
If you have ever considered yourself a germaphobe and shuddered at the thought of bacteria surrounding you, recent scientific research may shock you. Did you know that the average human can have as much as five pounds of bacteria living on and inside of them?
(09/28/17 1:37pm)
From an evolutionary standpoint, aging makes no sense. Why deteriorate over time, when you could simply reproduce forever? How does it benefit us to grow older?